The countdown has begun! I will guide you through my watch flipping journey. One by one. From the first to the last. What made me buy it? What made me sell it? Over 400 watches has come and gone during the years. Instead of boring you with too much technical details I will try to focus on giving you my thoughts and refelections and at the same time trying to add a personal touch to my journey by sharing some moments when the watches has accompanied me through life. Read and enjoy!

Menu

2015-02-01

No 16, 28, 46, 62, 106, 125, 182 & 242 - Seiko 6309-7040

I don’t
think I was more than eight or nine years old when I saw The Abyss the first
time. For you who don’t know the movie it is a sci-fi adventure from 1989
taking place in the deep ocean starring Ed Harris in the lead role. It wasn’t
until my interest in watches emerged that I noticed the big dive watch that “Bud”
was wearing. “What the hell is that?” I asked myself, one evening in October
2009 while watching this epic film, and threw myself in front of my computer to
let Google find the answer for me. It was a Seiko 6309-7049 (US-version) and I
had to have one right away. I didn’t do much research and eBay had many for
sale. They were all 6309-7040’s (Japanese version) and for some reason they
were all located in the Philippines but I didn’t let that worry me and used
buy-it-now on a piece that I thought looked decent.

﻿﻿

“Bud” from The Abyss with his 6309-7049.

#16 – My first 6309-7040. Looked good to me at the time.

From February 1980.

I later learned from other Seiko enthusiasts that you had to be careful when
buying those. Apparently the ones located in Asia usually were all taken apart,
polished and fitted with aftermarket parts which of course mine was as well. So
I sold it to find one in original condition. And in February 2010 I found one,
also located in the Philippines but this one looked alright on the pictures and
the auction also stated that all parts were all original. But what I received
was something completely else. The watch I received was obviously not the one
on the pictures. This one actually looked worse that the first one I got.
Everything was wrong and the crown didn’t screw in at all. The movement was
also in a bad shape and I ended up selling it for parts. It was useless.

#28 - This is NOT how a 6309-7040 should look like. Crappy rubber, wrong bezel insert, a dial that screams fake and a crown that doesn’t screw.

The third one I bought was in June 2010 and it was an already modified one. I
knew everything were aftermarket parts from the start so this time I didn’t
feel ripped off. I bought it to make another modification myself. I kept the
plongeur hands but switched the dial to a “Plo-proof” dial and exchanged the
bezel insert. The look was kind of clean but it got boring in the end. I still
wanted one in an untouched condition.

#46 - Modified from the start with plongeur hands.

From November 1981.

Modified with new dial and insert. The plongeur hands were kept.

Chillaxing in the sunset in July 2010. My sister next to me is wearing her Traser Commander.

Finally! In late November 2010 I found one with all original parts and its
patina was incredible. It looked fantastic.

#62 – All original.

But one year later in November 2011 I found an even better one and went for
that one instead. It came on an aftermarket super oyster bracelet which I
switched for a Yobokies beads-of-rice that I think looked crazy good.

#106 – All original on a super oyster bracelet.

Next to the Doxa 1000t. Brothers on Beads-of-Rice. More about the Doxa later.

On the flat vent Z22 which I personally prefer.

Wristshot with a lousy mobile camera at work.

The sixth one was bought in March 2012 and it was also one with aftermarket
parts but it was purchased to be a part of a project so the aftermarket parts
didn’t matter. The plan was to fit it with one of those Scubapro 450 dials that
you can find on eBay and it was to be re-lumed. For some reason I lost interest
before I even began the project and instead I sold it as a do-it-yourself kit.
﻿

#125 – Aftermarket dial.

The unfinished Scubapro project.

In July 2013 I came across one in original condition (apart from the bezel
insert) that looked almost brand new. It looked so clean it was boring. I
bought a waffle rubber from Yobokies and carried it for a couple of days and
later sold it. This one was actually from 1984, my birth year, but it was made
in July. If it would have been May it would definitely have been a keeper.
﻿

#182 – A nice specimen from 1984.

On the Yobokies waffle rubber.

In January 2015 I was offered an original as a part payment when selling a
Squale 50atm. You rarely get interesting stuff suggested as part trades but
passing on a 6309-7040 when being offered one would never happen. I just love
this model! Anyhow, the exterior looked awesome, perfect patina, but the
interior turned out to be in a really bad condition. I wore the watch for a
couple of days but the movement lost about fifteen minutes per day. I decided
to use this one for another project I’ve always wanted to try out. I felt a bit
sorry for it when Magnus and I took it apart but it will live on just in
another shape. More about this project later on.
﻿

#242 – The eight and last one so far. Was sacrificed for the greater good.

I’ve decided not to buy another 6309-7040 until I find a perfect piece from May
1984 and preferably it should be a 6309-7049 (US version) like Ed wore. It is definitely
my favorite of all the vintage Seiko divers. A must have for everyone!